Difference between revisions of "Phosphatase Subfamily Tensin"

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Revision as of 04:55, 28 December 2014

Phosphatase Classification: Superfamily CC1: Family PTEN: Subfamily Tensin

Tensins are PTEN-related phosphatases involved in integrin signaling.

Evolution

Tensins are found throughout holozoa. Drosophilids have a truncated ortholog (blistery) which lacks the phosphatase domain, though the full-length form is seen in mosquitoes. One of the four human members, TNS4, is also truncated.

Domain Structure

Tensins are long proteins, with an N-terminal phosphatase domain followed immediately by a PTEN_C2 domain, which acts as a lipid-binding domain. They have a poorly conserved middle region and and SH2 and usually PTB domains at the C-terminus. Human TENC1 and the sponge Tensin also have an N-terminal C1 domain. Humans also have a homologous TENC4 protein which is N-terminally truncated and has lost the phosphatase domain. The phosphatase domain is divergent and not picked by by many domain tools.

Functions

Tensin are localized to integrin-mediated focal adhesions. The PTB domain binds to the cytoplasmic region of integrins, and they bind actin through an N-terminal region. SH2 domains interact with a variety of tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins, including PI3K, FAK, and p130Cas. The catalytic functions of the phosphatase domain are not well understood. TNS2 (TENC1) induced in vivo dephosporylation of phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate, though the activity could not be replaced in vitro [1]. Another report[2] showed TNS2 protein tyrosine phosphatase activity on IRS-1


References

  1. Hafizi S, Gustafsson A, Oslakovic C, Idevall-Hagren O, Tengholm A, Sperandio O, Villoutreix BO, and Dahlbäck B. Tensin2 reduces intracellular phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate levels at the plasma membrane. Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2010 Aug 27;399(3):396-401. DOI:10.1016/j.bbrc.2010.07.085 | PubMed ID:20678486 | HubMed [Hafizi]
  2. Koh A, Lee MN, Yang YR, Jeong H, Ghim J, Noh J, Kim J, Ryu D, Park S, Song P, Koo SH, Leslie NR, Berggren PO, Choi JH, Suh PG, and Ryu SH. C1-Ten is a protein tyrosine phosphatase of insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1), regulating IRS-1 stability and muscle atrophy. Mol Cell Biol. 2013 Apr;33(8):1608-20. DOI:10.1128/MCB.01447-12 | PubMed ID:23401856 | HubMed [Koh]
All Medline abstracts: PubMed | HubMed